When freelance photographer Cynthia Carris Alonso went to Cuba for the
first time in 1992, her assignment was to take pictures of musicians for
a German record company.

"I had photographed a rumba group from Cuba that was [performing] in
Harlem," she says, "and I was fascinated to learn more about a country
that was illegal for Americans to travel to."

She fell in love with the island and traveled there often that year.
And among the souvenirs she brought back was a new artistic direction and
a Havana-born husband.

She also came home with a deep appreciation for what she calls "the
soaring and incredible Cuban spirit."

Nearly 12 years, several more trips and thousands of pictures later,
Carris Alonso has made a second career out of chronicling Cuban culture
and capturing that spirit on film. Her colorful, vibrant photographs have
been exhibited in the U.S., Canada and Brazil.

Her latest exhibit, "Cuba Vista," is at Portfolio restaurant in Manhattan
through May 31. The Italian eatery, at 4 W. 19th St., regularly displays
photography as part of the decor.

Most of the images in "Cuba Vista" depict Cuban people in positive,
artistic poses - a dancer at the famed Tropicana club, a tattooed model
brandishing a cigar, musicians performing and brightly-costumed revelers
honoring Santería gods.

Yet Carris Alonso says she has been criticized by anti-Castroites who
see her pretty pictures as glossing over how hard life really is under
communist rule.

"My photographs are not about the positive vs. the negative, or capitalism
vs. communism," says Carris Alonso, who has also covered hard news stories
on the island.

Working for such magazines as Newsweek, she documented Pope John Paul's
historic visit to Cuba in 1998 and the damage wrought by Hurricane Lilly
two years earlier.

"My goal is to share the colors, customs and rhythms of Cuba with people
who are unable to experience them and with people who already know and
value them," says Carris Alonso.

"The photos represent their incredible and vibrant spirit that is an
inspiration in spite of such dire living conditions and difficult economic
times."